Wabash, St. Louis & Pacific Railway Co. v. People ex rel. Walker

27 N.E. 456, 137 Ill. 181, 1891 Ill. LEXIS 1028
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 27 N.E. 456 (Wabash, St. Louis & Pacific Railway Co. v. People ex rel. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wabash, St. Louis & Pacific Railway Co. v. People ex rel. Walker, 27 N.E. 456, 137 Ill. 181, 1891 Ill. LEXIS 1028 (Ill. 1891).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shope

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The second and third errors assigned are practically abandoned by counsel for appellant, and need no discussion at our hands.

The first assignment questions the rulings of the court upon the ground that the description of the property against which the road tax was returned delinquent was not sufficient to authorize judgment for such tax. Section 42 of the Bevenue law provides that the right of way of railroads, including the superstructure of main, side, second tracks and terminals, and the stations and improvements of the company on such right -of way, shall, for the purposes of taxation, be held to be real estate, “and denominated ‘railroad track,’ and shall be so listed and valued.” (Ohio and Mississippi Ry. Co. v. Weber, 96 Ill. 443; Chicago and Alton Railroad Co. v. The People, 98 id. 350.) The section provides that the same shall be described in the assessment thereof as a strip of land extending on each side of such railroad track, and embracing the same, together with the improvements and all stations thereon, commencing at the-point where such track crosses the boundary line entering- the county, city, town or village, and extending to the point of exit therefrom, or to the point of termination within the same, as the ease may be, and containing ; . . . acres, more or less,, inserting the name of the county, city, town or village, -and number of acres, and length of track in feet, and that no other description shall be necessary. Section 43 provides that the value of the “railroad track” thus defined shall be listed .and taxed in the several counties, towns, villages, districts and. cities, in proportion that the length of the main track therein bears to the whole length of the road in the State, etc.. Section 44 provides that the movable property of the company shall be-personal property, and, for the purposes of taxation, shall be denominated “rolling-stock, ”• and requires classified return by the company thereof in the month of May of each year. Section 45 provides for the listing and taxation of “rolling stock”' in the several counties, towns, villages, districts and cities, in the proportion that the main track therein situated bears to-.the whole length of said road within the State. The act (section 109) requires the State Board of Equalization to assess the railroad property “denominated in this act as ‘railroad track’ and ‘rolling stock,”’ and that the amount so determined and assessed by said board shall be certified by the Auditor to-the county clerks of the proper counties. It is then provided that the county clerks shall in like manner distribute to the-counties, and to the several towns, districts, villages and cities in their counties entitled thereto, a proportionate share of the-value of such “railroad track” and “rolling stock” so certified by the Auditor.

It is manifest that these provisions are intended to control and direct the State Board of Equalization in making the assessment, and the county clerks in distributing the amount assessed upon the railroad property in their counties among the various municipalities and taxing districts therein. In the absence of anything showing the contrary, it must be presumed that these officers discharged their duty in compliance with the statute; that in making the assessment the State board properly described appellant’s railroad track as required by section 42 of the Revenue act before referred to, and that the clerk certified to these several road districts their proportionate and distributive share of the assessed value of such railroad track and rolling stock, as subject to taxation therein. With making the valuation the highway commissioners had nothing to do. The value of appellant’s property for purposes of taxation" had been determined by competent authority, and it only remained for them tó levy and extend against it the amount of road and bridge tax they had previously ascertained as necessary, in accordance with the provisions of sections 83 and 119, of chapter 121, of the statutes. For this purpose the commissioners of highways are required annually to make lists (Bev. Stat. chap. 121, sec. 84,) containing a description of each tract of land in the district, the name of the owner, if known, “and the name of the owner of any railroad property known as ‘railroad track’ and ‘rolling stock,”’ etc., and opposite the name of each owner of property known as “railroad track” and “rolling stock” to place “the valuation thereof as-assessed by the State Board of Equalization for the purposes-of taxation for the previous year, and distributed by the county-clerk, and opposite each valuation and assessment they shall extend the road tax assessed thereon, in a separate column.”

There was in the levy of the tax in each of the road districts complained of, a substantial, if not a literal, compliance with the law. The commissioners of the townships, respectively, having ascertained the amount of tax required, etc., prepared "lists for the several road districts, giving the names of the owners, amount of valuation as fixed by the State Board of Equalization and distributed by the clerk, and in a separate ■column extended the road tax. The only complaint made under this assignment of error is, that the property is described in such lists as “railroad track” and as “proportion of rolling stock,” or as “rolling stock main line,” and as “main track,” etc. As before said, section 42 relates to the mode of making the valuation and assessment by the State Board of Equalization, and all that can be required in making the lists requiredby section 84 is, that the property shall be described with that certainty that will enable the officers charged with the extension and collection of taxes, to ascertain the property against which the same are levied, and to apprise the owners of the levy upon the specific property sought to be charged. (Cooley on Taxation, 282-286; Blackwell on Tax Titles, 124; Sanford v. The People, 102 Ill. 374; The People v. Chicago and Alton Railroad Co. 96 id. 369.) There was here no uncertainty. The property was listed as the property of appellant within the road district, in the township named and in the county named, and the property was described as the “railroad track” and “rolling stock” of appellant within said road district, as valued by the Btate Board of Equalization for the proper year. The property could be no other than that portion of the main track, right of way and improvements assessable by the State Board of Equalization, lying within the road district, and its proportionate share of rolling stock assessment, and ‘the description afforded ample means of identification. We are of opinion that the description of the property was sufficiently certain, and that the levy was not void.

The fourth assignment of error questions the correctness of the judgment against the “railroad track” and “rolling stock” of appellant, within the entire county, for the several amounts levied by the highway commissioners in the several road districts for which the tax was returned delinquent. It is conceded that the road tax for 1889, the year in question, assessed- and levied upon appellant’s property in some of the road districts in the county, was paid, and that in a part only of the road districts in the county through which the road is located the road tax was returned delinquent. We have already seen that railroad track, right of way, etc., for the purposes of tax•ation, are to be deemed real property.

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Bluebook (online)
27 N.E. 456, 137 Ill. 181, 1891 Ill. LEXIS 1028, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wabash-st-louis-pacific-railway-co-v-people-ex-rel-walker-ill-1891.